ABSTRACT

As a setting for juvenile literature, the Arctic has traditionally been a space for adventure, the exotic and the fantastic. More recent works have used the Arctic setting to explore a dystopian future, often related to climate change. The aim of the present volume is to examine themes in Arctic juvenile fiction from the early nineteenth century until today. The deceptive image of the Arctic as geographically uniform seems to promise a cultural coherence, but the collection illustrates the diversity of Arctic literature by critically discussing and comparing works written by visitors and settlers as well as by indigenous peoples. The chapters combine macro- and micro-perspectives to interrogate and illuminate the role of Arctic literature for young readers in creating, maintaining and increasingly challenging Arctic myths and motifs.

chapter |26 pages

Introduction

The Arctic in Literature for Children and Young Adults

part I|59 pages

Polar History and Its Transformations

chapter 1|15 pages

Polar Icon?

Fridtjof Nansen for Children and Young Adults

chapter 2|13 pages

An Arctic Tom Sawyer

Vilhjalmur Stefansson and Violet Irwin’s Kak

chapter 3|14 pages

The Snow Baby Books

Mediating Arctic Experiences to Children

part II|73 pages

Indigenous and Localized Arctics

chapter 5|18 pages

Girlhood in the Arctic

Word-Image Relations in R. M. Ballantyne’s Canadian Adventures

chapter 6|15 pages

Encountering Otherness in the Geographical Imaginary

Lapland Journeys in Early Swedish Children’s Books

chapter 7|13 pages

“To Help You Find Your Way Home”

Michael Kusugak’s Reimagining of Fear and Danger in the Canadian Arctic

part III|69 pages

Arcticity and Imaginary Arctics

chapter 10|15 pages

Negotiating the Snow Queen

Versions of an Arctic Archetype

chapter 12|14 pages

Playing the Arctic

Arthur Ransome’s Winter Holiday

chapter 13|14 pages

Arctic Adventure Girls

Television Narratives and Discourses